Hal Hartley Quotes
Our focus is on winning that game. We have no time for that. It's all about winning our games, not about settling any scores.
Hal Hartley
Quotes to Explore
-
It used to be that I wanted to be taller. Once I made 5-foot-1, I was happy.
Tara Lipinski
-
I was pretty young when I decided I wanted to, well, more so be a singer. I started singing in church in my hometown, East Orange, New Jersey. I knew when I was about five or six that I wanted to be a performer.
Naturi Naughton
3LW
-
I think God has it written down for me, that without training and working hard you will never achieve desired results. All three times I have had to toil my way into the Olympics. Talking about pressure, well that is something you have to learn to deal with in sports.
Vijender Singh
-
I'm a religious broadcaster.
Pat Robertson
-
Texas is not really a red state - it's just a non-voting state.
Wendy Davis
-
I had a blast in the '90s, perhaps too much fun, and maybe I should have worked a lot harder and partied a lot less, but I definitely don't regret the 12 years I spent living out in L.A.
Zach Galligan
-
When I look at pictures when I was younger, I do the quintessential cringe.
Rachel Roy
-
All persons possessing any portion of power ought to be strongly and awfully impressed with an idea that they act in trust and that they are to account for their conduct in that trust to the one great Master, Author, and Founder of society.
Edmund Burke
-
We're in a giant car heading towards a brick wall and everyone's arguing over where they're going to sit.
David Suzuki
-
Even the most fickle are faithful to a few bad habits.
Mason Cooley
-
I was a professional baseball player from the time I was drafted out of high school in 1981 until the time I retired in 2003.
David Cone
-
To see what happens in the real world when an information cascade takes over, and the bidders have almost nothing but one another’s behavior to estimate an item’s value, look no further than Peter A. Lawrence’s developmental biology text The Making of a Fly, which in April 2011 was selling for $23,698,655.93 (plus $3.99 shipping) on Amazon’s third-party marketplace. How and why had this—admittedly respected—book reached a sale price of more than $23 million? It turns out that two of the sellers were setting their prices algorithmically as constant fractions of each other: one was always setting it to 0.99830 times the competitor’s price, while the competitor was automatically setting their own price to 1.27059 times the other’s. Neither seller apparently thought to set any limit on the resulting numbers, and eventually the process spiraled totally out of control.
Brian Christian